Mahendravarman I
| Mahendravarman I | |
|---|---|
| Sculpture of Mahendravarman I with his queens at Adivaraha Cave Temple. | |
| Pallava King | |
| Reign | 590–630 | 
| Predecessor | Simhavishnu | 
| Successor | Narasimhavarman I | 
| Issue | Narasimhavarman I | 
| House | Pallava | 
| Father | Simhavishnu | 
| Pallava Monarchs (200s–800s CE) | |
|---|---|
| Virakurcha | (??–??) | 
| Vishnugopa I | (??–??) | 
| Vishnugopa II | (??–??) | 
| Simhavarman III | (??–??) | 
| Simhavishnu | 575–600 | 
| Mahendravarman I | 600–630 | 
| Narasimhavarman I | 630–668 | 
| Mahendravarman II | 668–670 | 
| Paramesvaravarman I | 670–695 | 
| Narasimhavarman II | 695–728 | 
| Paramesvaravarman II | 728–731 | 
| Nandivarman II | 731–795 | 
| Dantivarman | 795–846 | 
| Nandivarman III | 846–869 | 
| Nrpatungavarman | 869–880 | 
| Aparajitavarman | 880–897 | 
Mahendravarman I (reigned 590–630) was a Pallava emperor who ruled over realm covering the southern portions of present-day Andhra region and northern regions of what forms present-day Tamil Nadu in India, in the early 7th century. He was a scholar, a painter, an architect and a musician. He was the son of Simhavishnu, who defeated the Kalabhras and re-established the Pallava kingdom.
During his reign, the Chalukya monarch Pulakeshin II attacked the Pallava realm. The Pallavas fought a series of wars in the northern Vengi region, before Mahendra-varman decimated his chief enemies at Pullalur (according to Pallava grants at Kuram, Kasakudi and Tadantottam). Although Mahendra-varman saved his capital, he lost the northern provinces to Pulakeshin. Tamil literature flourished under his rule, with the rise in popularity of Tevaram written by Appar and Sambandhar. Mahendravarman I was the author of the play Mattavilasa Prahasana which is a Sanskrit satire. During his period "Bhagwatajjukam", another satire (prahasan), was written by Bodhayan. King Mahendravarman mentioned this on a stone inscription in Mamandur along with his own Mattavilas Prahasan.
Mahendra-varman was succeeded to the throne by his more famous son Narasimhavarman I in 630 CE. who defeated Pulakeshin II of Chalukya dynasty and ransacked the Chalukyan capital city of Vatapi (also known as Badami).